Abstract

Ciudad Juárez is characterized, among other elements, by being one of the towns with the highest rates of femicides in Latin America. From this reality multiple self-managed initiatives arise with the purpose of seeking justice and keeping the women and girls who are no longer there in the collective memory of those who remain. In this line, Ellas Tienen Nombre poses a cartographic project that seeks to record the location of this type of crime and contribute to the construction of the victims’ narrative. Thus, from the perspective of feminist geography, this article proposes the interpretation of this cartographic work as a narrative strategy that enhances memory and establishes itself as a multifunctional tool for critical analysis as a resource for visibility and comprehension of the territorial control of violence and impunity, providing the opening of a new space for discussion to understand the impact of femicide on the social tissue.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call